Ljubomir Nenadović

Ljubomir Nenadović
Љубомир Ненадовић

Portrait of Ljubomir Nenadović in 1851
work of Anastas Jovanović
Born (1826-09-14)September 14, 1826
Brankovina, Valjevo, Principality of Serbia, Ottoman Empire
Died January 21, 1895(1895-01-21) (aged 68)
Valjevo, Kingdom of Serbia
Language Serbian
Ethnicity Serbian
Period 1849—1895
Genre poetry and travel writings
Notable works Rukopisi Prote Mateje Nenadovića

Ljubomir Nenadović (14 September 1826 — 21 January 1895) was Serbian writer, poet, translator, diplomat, minister of education and member of the Serbian Royal Academy.

Family

Ljubomir was born in Brankovina, Valjevo, Principality of Serbia, to father Prota Mateja Nenadović, of the affluent Nenadović family. His father was Serbian archpriest, writer and leader in the First Serbian Uprising; he was appointed Prime Minister 27 Aug 1805 - Jan 1807 by President Karađorđe. Ljubomir's uncle Sima and his grandfather's brother Jakov also fought in the Serbian Revolution, and served the Serbian revolutionary government. His grandfather was Aleksa Nenadović (1749-1804), one of the first victims of the Slaughter of the Dukes on the 31st of January 1804.

Life

He graduated at gymnasium in Belgrade and began to attend lyceum. In period between 1844 and 1848 he studied at universities in Prague, Berlin and Heidelberg. After he returned to Serbia in 1848 he became professor at lyceum.[1] During this period he befriended Petar II Petrović-Njegoš and years later wrote in his Pisma iz Italije (Letter from Italy) the experience of traveling with Njegoš in Italy and observing him as a ruler at the court in Cetinje. His narrative on Njegoš was published some twenty and forty years after Njegoš's death (1851).

In 1850 Nenadović founded the literary review Šumadinka (Serbian Cyrillic: Шумадинка). This magazine he edited and published between 1850 and 1857 sometimes together with almanac Šumadinče (Serbian Cyrillic: Шумадинче) in which he published his father's manuscripts about the First Serbian uprising, (Rukopisi Prote Mateje Nenadovića). Until 1857 he was employed with Ministry of education and internal affairs. He corresponded with writers Đorđe Rajković (1825-1886), Ludwig August von Frankl, Vuk Stefanović Karadžić, and Milica Stojadinović-Srpkinja to whom he dedicated a poem. In 1857 he went to Cetinje in Montenegro. He had frequent correspondence with Montenegrin Knjaz Danilo and organized delivery of one printing press to him. In 1858 he was secretary of the mission of Principality of Serbia in Istanbul. In 1859 he was appointed to be head of the Ministry of Education. In 1868 he retired and lived in Valjevo until 1874 when he left for Montenegro where he stayed until 1878. From 1878 until his death in 1895 he lived in Valjevo.[2]

Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts

The first academicians to be appointed in the Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts on the 5th of April 1887 were four for each professional academy. The first members of the Academy of Natural Sciences were Josif Pančić, Dimitrije Nešić, Ljubomir Klerić and Jovan Žujović; in the Academy of Philosophical Sciences these were Stojan Novaković, Milan Kujundžić Aberdar, Svetislav Vulović and Svetomir Nikolajević; first members of the Academy of Social Sciences were Čedomilj Mijatović, Milan Milićević, Ljubomir Kovačević (1848-1918) and Panta Srećković; and in the Academy of Arts: Ljubomir Nenadović, Matija Ban, Mihailo Valtrović and Davorin Jenko. The oldest member, Josif Pančić, was appointed president and the youngest member, Jovan Žujović, was temporarily chosen as permanent secretary.

Selected bibliography

The first texts he wrote were published in Podunavka magazine in 1843.

His prose works include:

Legacy

A library in Valjevo is named after him. There is a plaquette named after Ljubomir P Nenadović. It is awarded every year since 1994 by Kolubara magazine to Valjevo citizen of the year.[3]

References

  1. Skerlić, Jovan (1912), Istorija nove srpske književnosti (in Serbian), Belgrade: Cvijanović, OCLC 215920077
  2. Skerlić, Jovan (1912), Istorija nove srpske književnosti (in Serbian), Belgrade: Cvijanović, OCLC 215920077
  3. Ranković, Zdravko (2001). "Priznanje novinaru "Vremena" Draganu Todoroviću". Vreme. 525. Retrieved 26 July 2012.
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